Greenhouse gasses allow sunlight into the Earth's atmosphere. Globally, about half of this energy is absorbed by the Earth's surface, and the other half is reflected back into space. When the Earth gives off this heat (in the form of longwave, infrared radiation) it is trapped by the greenhouse gasses. This is the reason that our planet is warm enough to live on, however, scientists believe that it is the basis for the general warming pattern the Earth is currently experiencing.
"Greenhouse gas" is just a catchy term that means "traps heat." Due to the way the atmosphere is layered, some gases trap more heat than others; CO being about the weakest "greenhouse gas."
According to the phrase, it may seem that way, but actually, no, they do not.The phrase "greenhouse gas" is simply a metaphor describing the ways carbon dioxide and other gases in the atmosphere can trap heat emanating from the earth just the way a greenhouse traps warmth for plants to grow.
Yes. Growing trees and vegetation is the only serious way to remove the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
No. Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere capture heat, and heat is energy, but we have no way of using this energy for ourselves as fuel. This extra energy in the atmosphere will be expended in more severe weather, like storms and cyclones.
Greenhouse gasses are NOT "obviously lighter than air"; carbon dioxide is significantly heavier than air.One way to weigh something that's lighter than air is to weigh it in a vacuum.
Greenhouse gases work the way blankets work, by keeping heat in.
"Greenhouse gas" is just a catchy term that means "traps heat." Due to the way the atmosphere is layered, some gases trap more heat than others; CO being about the weakest "greenhouse gas."
The greenhouse effect is the natural way that the Earth keeps warm. Too many extra greenhouse gases turn the greenhouse effect into an enhanced greenhouse effect. The enhanced, or accelerated, greenhouse effect is causing global warming.
According to the phrase, it may seem that way, but actually, no, they do not.The phrase "greenhouse gas" is simply a metaphor describing the ways carbon dioxide and other gases in the atmosphere can trap heat emanating from the earth just the way a greenhouse traps warmth for plants to grow.
The so-called "greenhouse gases" CO2, methane, water vapor, etc.
Normally greenhouse gases are bad, but without it, Earth would have no way of holding in heat and our planet would be below 0 degrees. We're just putting out too much.
Afforestation. The only way is to plant more trees.
Ozone itself is a green house gas. There would be no way that green house gases would harm it.
Nitrogen and oxygen do not cause the greenhouse effect because they are not greenhouse gases. Greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, methane, and water vapor have properties that enable them to absorb and emit infrared radiation, trapping heat in the earth's atmosphere. Nitrogen and oxygen, although abundant in our atmosphere, do not have the same ability to trap heat in the same way.
Yes. Growing trees and vegetation is the only serious way to remove the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
No. Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere capture heat, and heat is energy, but we have no way of using this energy for ourselves as fuel. This extra energy in the atmosphere will be expended in more severe weather, like storms and cyclones.
Think of it this way: The bigger the population gets, the more resources they use, the more pollution they emit and the bigger this problem gets. Reduce the population, and you reduce the levels of greenhouse gases in the atmospere.